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Battlefield 3 Online Gameplay – TIME IS MONEY

01-06-2012 09:57 Battlefield 3 online gameplay with dual commentary. Operation Firestorm Conquest. Click the like and subscribe buttons to help us out! Battlefield 3: Prepare for full-scale war with Battlefield 3, the third major evolution of the long-running online battle franchise. Using the power of Frostbite 2 game engine technology, Battlefield 3 delivers superior visual quality, a grand sense of scale, massive destruction, dynamic audio and incredibly lifelike character animations. As bullets whiz by, walls crumble, and explosions throw you to the ground, the battlefield feels more alive and interactive than ever before. In Battlefield 3, players step into the role of the elite US Marines where they will experience heart-pounding single player missions and competitive multiplayer actions ranging across diverse locations from around the globe including Europe, Middle-East and North America. Developer ? DICE (Digital Illusions CE) Publisher ? Electronic Arts Genre ? Online Shooter Release Date ? October 28, 2011 Platforms ? Xbox 360, PS3, Microsoft Windows Check out our stuff!: Skyrim Walkthrough: Max Payne 3 Walkthrough: Prototype 2: Battlefield Online Gameplay: Minecraft Co-op Adventure:

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Battlefield 3 Online Gameplay - TIME IS MONEY

America likes its first ladies all rose and no thorn

Ive been listening to Michelle Obama read her new book, American Grown: The Story of the White House Kitchen Garden and Gardens Across America. There are far worse ways to spend a day. Shes got that great Chicago accent, for one thing, which reminds me of tall buildings and big skies. And I get to imagine her slapping Baracks hand when he reaches for the Doritos. (Theres quite a bit of preaching about how she cleared junk food from the family kitchen, and only allows the girls dessert on Sunday.)

As well, the story of how she came to plant the first vegetable patch at the White House since Eleanor Roosevelts victory garden is full of useless but wonderful trivia: Thomas Jefferson, for example, was obsessive in his quest to grow a four-foot cucumber, a fact I intend to bore people with from now until my death.

And yet, I kept wondering as Ms. Obama described her broccoli and figs, is a four-foot cucumber really the proper subject of study for a woman who has a law degree from Harvard? I would rather have listened to her opinions about unemployment, the Arab Spring or urban planning. Im not saying that learning about vegetables and working to defeat childhood obesity arent worthy goals; of course they are. Theyre just so safe.

But Ms. Obama has clearly learned the Lesson of Hillary, which is, in short: Estrange not the voter, especially during an election year. As Jodi Kantor notes in her biography The Obamas, the first lady is vigilant about not appearing to be a policy bossy boots, or a decorating dictator, like those who came before: Openly influential first ladies like Nancy Reagan and Hillary Clinton were deemed meddlers, unelected figures who held unearned power. Ms. Obama is determined to spend the coin of public goodwill more wisely, and if that means using fertilizer to help her husband get re-elected, so be it.

There is, of course, a soft-diplomacy precedent for this. As her husband campaigned for a second term in 1996, Ms. Clinton (Id call her Ms. Rodham, but shed been sanitized of her original name by then) was considered too pushy. She was the smiling barracuda to the right-wing press, and even Newsweek, when it featured her on the cover, asked readers, Saint or Sinner?

So what kind of response would you expect from the only first lady who arrived at the White House with a five-page resum, as one newspaper put it? In her husbands re-election year, she wrote a book about children. Literally, a motherhood issue. It Takes a Village: And Other Lessons Children Teach Us showed a gentler Ms. Clinton who talked about her difficulties with breastfeeding and the challenges of bringing an infant home from the hospital.

True, she wrote about policy as well education, health care and it was no where near the literary nadir represented by another of Ms. Clintons books, Dear Socks, Dear Buddy: Kids Letters to the First Pets (Ill bet that doesnt make it onto the five-page resum). Still, as a political ploy, it was both transparent and successful: It Takes a Village was a bestseller, and guess who got re-elected in 1996?

In its way, American Grown is an equally genius bit of pamphleteering. It could have been printed in red, white and blue ink, so often does it use words and images designed to stir a patriots heart: harvest, hope, seeds that flourish. Theres a pervasive nostalgia for a time when children rode their bikes alone after school, hard-working parents put vegetables on the dinner table and kids got sent to bed if they didnt eat them. It might as well have been titled Were All In This Together, Pilgrim.

The book details Ms. Obamas journey from neophyte gardener to Beltway Martha Stewart, but there is another message on offer: Whatever detours or bumps in the road we would face, I was determined that this garden would succeed. Fortunately, it did. The seeds took root, the plants grew and produced all kinds of fruits and vegetables and each new season in our garden brought new gifts and lessons. I dont think we need the services of Bletchley Park to decode that one.

I love Ms. Obama. At least, I love the version of her that appears in Ms. Kantors book: tetchy, driven, no-nonsense, incredibly smart, possessing a B.S. detector as sensitive as a truffle-sniffing dogs nose. I want to see more of that Michelle, but I fear it wont happen at least not until she escapes the White House. The country wants its first lady to be all rose and no thorn.

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America likes its first ladies all rose and no thorn

John McGuinness fastest ahead of Superbike Isle of Man TT

Practice week of the 2012 Isle of Man TT has drawn to a close with 17-times TT winner John McGuinness at the top of the timesheets ahead of tomorrows six-lap Superbike race.

The week began well for the Honda TT Legends, with McGuinness setting the fastest laps in dry and sunny conditions in the first three superbike sessions. By Wednesday the Morecambe Missile had broken the 130mph barrier with a 130.079 lap that remained the fastest of the week.

Thursdays superbike practice was cut short due to sea mist, while the final session on Friday was cancelled after an oil spill at Barregarrow.

"We hit the ground running this week" said McGuinness. "We went out there on the first night when the conditions were great and we just got stuck in.

"I didnt feel like I was sticking my neck out, I was just hitting all the apexes and cruising around feeling really relaxed. I was hitting 128s, 129s, 130s so were definitely in the ball park." he explained.

"Its not going to be easy but Im ready to race and Im well up for it. Im starting number one so its just down to me, the stop watch and the track and hopefully we can stand in the winners enclosure.McGuinness concluded.

Superbike Fastest Laps [All Sessions]: 1. John McGuinness [Honda] 17:24.20 130.079mph 2. Bruce Anstey [Honda] 17:28.33 129.566mph 3. Cameron Donald [Honda] 17:32.32 129.075mph 4. Guy Martin [Suzuki] 17:34.02 128.866mph 5. Michael Rutter [Kawasaki] 17:40.56 128.072mph 6. James Hillier [Kawasaki] 17:42.73 127.811mph

Monday, June 4 Monster Energy Supersport TT Race 1 Sidecar Qualifying Royal London 360 Superstock TT Race

Wednesday, June 6 SES TT Zero Challenge Monster Energy Supersport TT Race 2 Sure Sidecar TT Race 2 Senior Qualifying Lightweight Qualifying

Friday, June 8 BikerPetition.co.uk Lightweight TT Race PokerStars Senior TT Race

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John McGuinness fastest ahead of Superbike Isle of Man TT

York woman killed in Isle of Man bike crash

Breaking news York woman killed in Isle of Man bike crash

5:28pm Saturday 2nd June 2012 in News By Mark Stead, mark.stead@thepress.co.uk

A WOMAN from York killed in a motorbike crash on the Isle of Man has been named.

Amanda Heather McNichol, 49, died at the scene of the accident in the early hours of Wednesday.

She had been riding as a pillion passenger when the collision happened at about 6.55am near the approach to a roadside marker called the 32nd Milestone on Mountain Road on the island.

Police say four motorcycles - three Hondas and a Yamaha, which were all heading towards Douglas at the time - were involved. Another pillion passenger was taken to hospital with serious but not life-threatening injuries.

The road was closed for several hours after the collision and police have since issued an appeal for witnesses to come forward, particularly a group of bikers parked near a bend in the road.

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York woman killed in Isle of Man bike crash

Thousands on Isle of Man for TT

1 June 2012 Last updated at 08:49 ET

Thousands of motorbike fans are arriving on the Isle of Man ahead of the TT races which start on Saturday.

About 13,000 motorbikes are booked to arrive during the festival, the highest number since the 2007 TT centenary celebration.

An extra ferry has been chartered and temporary accommodation has been built at the Grandstand in Douglas.

Visitor Jim Scott told the BBC: "Coming to the TT races has always been on my bucket list."

He added: "My pal and I love the atmosphere, it's a bikers' paradise and the atmosphere is brilliant."

The TT festival and Christmas are the two bookends of the year

Research undertaken by the department of tourism shows the TT festival is more well known around the world, than the Isle of Man itself.

TT and Motorsport manager Paul Philips said: "For the Isle of Man, the TT festival and Christmas are the two bookends of the year.

"The races have a huge following, they are hugely important because they give the island international fame."

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Thousands on Isle of Man for TT